iOS Onboarding Flow — A Key Design Moment
Onboarding is one of the most studied moments in iOS app design — the point where products compete hardest for clarity, conversion, and user trust. This page collects every documented Onboarding flow from the Page Flows iOS library, letting you study dozens of real examples side by side.
Full Onboarding Flows, Not Cropped Screenshots
Each recording captures the full Onboarding sequence — from the trigger screen through every step to completion. You see the copy, the layout, the animations, and the fallback states, not just cropped screenshots. For designers and PMs working on their own Onboarding flow, this turns competitor research from a day-long screenshot-gathering exercise into a focused browsing session.
Benchmark iOS Onboarding Design Decisions
The library is particularly useful when you're debating a specific approach: does a long Onboarding flow convert better than a short one? Should it use modals, full-screen takeovers, or inline progression? Rather than arguing in the abstract, you can point to real examples from top iOS apps and ground the decision in what ships.
Frequently Asked Questions
What iOS apps are included in the Onboarding flow examples?
The Onboarding collection features real recordings from leading iOS apps across many categories. Specific brands depend on how each app implements Onboarding, and new recordings are added regularly.
How long are iOS Onboarding flows typically?
Flow length varies by app — some Onboarding experiences are intentionally short to minimize friction, while others are longer to collect information or drive engagement. You can compare lengths and structures across examples.
Can I see Onboarding flows from apps in my specific industry?
Yes. Use brand and category filters to narrow to Onboarding flows from apps in your vertical, so you're benchmarking against direct competitors.
How does iOS Onboarding compare to the same flow on Android?
Many brands design Onboarding differently per platform — reflecting iOS vs Android conventions, gestures, and user expectations. You can compare them by visiting the Android Onboarding flows page.